January 7 – Fighting breaks out between Somali protesters and Ethiopian troops in the town of Beledweyne after an official is arrested for refusing to hand over a member of the ousted Islamic Courts Union. Three people are reportedly injured.[1]
January 8 – Abdullahi Yusuf Ahmed, Somalia's interim President, arrives in the capital, Mogadishu, his first visit since Mujahideen forces of the Islamic Courts Union fled advancing Ethiopian troops and interim government soldiers.[2]
January 23 – Ethiopia begins withdrawing troops from Mogadishu.[3]
January 27 – Ethiopia is going to withdraw one third of its troops stationed in Somalia by Sunday January 28, 2007, Ethiopia's Prime Minister Meles Zenawi says.[4]
Marchedit
March 30 – An Ethiopian helicopter is downed in Mogadishu as Ethiopian and Somali government troops battle insurgents.[5]
Apriledit
April 22 – More than 60 people are killed in the fourth day of heavy fighting between Ethiopian troops and Islamist militia in Mogadishu.[6]
April 24 - Ethiopian rebels from the Ogaden National Liberation Front raid a Chinese-run oil field in near the country's border with Somalia, killing 74.[7]
Julyedit
July 20 – The government of Ethiopia pardons and frees opposition leaders who had been sentenced to life imprisonment for their roles in riots following 2005 elections. Prime Minister Meles Zenawi denies that the release was forced by the United States.[8]
Septemberedit
September 1 – International aid agency Médecins Sans Frontières has accused Ethiopia of denying it access to the country's eastern Ogaden region.[9]
September 11 – The Ethiopian third millennium was celebrated nationwide and concert hall was organized in Millennium Hall in Addis Ababa.
September 13 – Ethiopia will deploy 5,000 troops as part of a joint United Nations - African Union mission in the Darfur region of Sudan.[10]
Octoberedit
October 9 – The Ethiopian Parliament re-elects Girma Wolde-Giorgis for a second six-year term.